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Exeter Times, 1903-8-13, Page 7
Ec.(JRHT IL Genuine r .. r +s Little ive Most Rear Signature cf` See Fac-Slrello Weepers Below. Ve v small coscl as cavy to :a/co as engem. rut �RR EajAbe'ME1N5rn FON `WI' eLlt'NESIL, Fri iB.�_E I LI O O S RI S S S,, FOlki ectFID LllaER: raill.gonIESTl PATI OIC, FOO %3.LI♦OW SKIN. FOr III COMPLEXION " �riOAWAr9>a use;,uvc.Ioxn*urs, ee eatI,wa:". merely Vegetable. ..ee. ee -------asses., CURE: SiCKe HEADACHE. �'G CART Rt 1TTLE JIVER PILLS, Kidney Are no respecter of persons. People in every walk of life are troubled. Have you a Backache? If you have it Is the first sign that the kidneys are not working properly. A neglected Backache leads to serious Kidney Trouble. Check it in time by taking DO.A.N5S KIDNEY PILLS "THE GREAT KIDNEY SPECIFIC." They cure all kinds of Kidney Troubles from Backache to Bright's Disease. c50c. a lox or 3: for $1.25 all dealers or, .. .: E DOAN KIDNEY PILL CO., Toronto. Oat. To the Weary Dyspeptic. We Ask This Question: Why don't you remove at "Weight at the pit of'the Stomach? Why do"n't you regulate that variable appetite, and condition the digestive organs so that it will not be necessary to starve the stomach to avoid distress after eating? The first step is to regulate the bowels. For this' purpose Burdock Blood Bitters Has No Equal. It nets promptly and effectually and permanently cures all derangements o' digestion. Pain in the Stomach. Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Cholera liZorbus, Cholera Infantum; Seasickness, d all kinds of Summer Com- aint . are quickly cured by &king 3. Extract of rt.ild Yq 0 It has been used by thousands for nearly sixtyyears—and we have Y yet to hear a complaint about its action. A few doses have often cured when all other remedies have tailed. Its action`' is ,sant Rapid, Reliable an. r � a ellakllQ' d E�al. Dr.. 'owler s Extracts, of Wild tr S ate b©rx is the original Bowel Complaint Cure. tense - SC z� 51ibs>;ittitss. THE DOMESTIC SERVANI Rev. Frank De ti?VUUt Talm ge Speaks of Her Many Advantages 9i)intered according to Act of the ,Par- liament of tlanada, In the year one Thousand Nino 1•iuedred and Three, by man. Bally, of Toronto, at the hepartment of Agriculture, Uttawa,l A despatch . from Chicago says: Rev. Frank De Witt Talmage preached from the following text: Matthew xi., 27, "Whosoever wi11 bo chief among you, let him be your servant." The tremendous' opportunities of usefulness open to a consecrated do- mestic is the subject. No position to -day accessible to a woman of or- dinary mental and physical capabili- ties will bring greater returns, finan- cially and spiritually', than that of- fered to the average servant girl. The gods were supposed to have al- lowed the beautiful queen of Cyprus to bless her little kingdom in a wonderful way. Every place of the rocky island which' her foot might touch would instantly be covered with brilliantly colored flora or with rich green verdure, Not so does God endow any human .bong; but in a better . way does the fable come true. The humble • domestic servant, be she cook in the kitchen, or a guardian in the nursery, or a waitress in the dining room, or sim- ply a chambermaid, may live a life which will carry fragrance wherever it goes.. TWO CLASSES OF SERVANTS. - But this sermonic theme has its dark side as well as its bright. It is shadowed either by avoidance or by slothfulness—.by avoidance be- cause in despising it and seeking other occupations inconveniences and social dimcglties are entailed on others; by slothfulness _because no one can do a duty badly or care- lessly without deteriorating in char- acter. The kitchen or the nursery may be a throne room, with a con- secrated domestic servant as a queen, or it may be a den of miser- able drudgery and the scene of con- stant bickering and discontent. In olden times there were two classes of servants, both male and female. The one was that consecrated band of workers which clearly realized that true service, no matter how humble, implied honor and useful- ness. Thus Joshua, great man .that he was, gladly and willingly became the servant of Moses, and Elisha was the servant of the great Elijah, and Eliezer was the servant of Ab- raham and Samuel of Eli. These Men knew that they, in their humble sphere, were working for the advance- ment of the world as truly as were their masters in their conspicuous sphere. The second class of servants was composed of the 'sullen slaves cap- tured in war. They were, for the most part, disgruntled and rebellious servitors. They felt that the tyr- anny of fate had placed the captives' manacles upon thein: wrists, and as soon as possible they would flee when chance for escape offered. So there aro women to -day serving in the kitchen and in the nursery who act as if they believe that' they are captured slaves. They are grumb- ling against their Work and meager pay. They aro spending one nail. of their time in finding fault with their mistresses and the other half in try- ing to find out a way of escape into. some other occupation where they can have more liberty and increased emoluments. As we world praise the grand work of the consecrated domestic., so wo would denounce the evt,',l behavior of the "wicked and slothful servant." TIIE WORD "ROYAL." The word "royal" is not restrict- ed to station. It is legitimately ap- plied to ally woman whose conduct in her own sphere is noble and faith- ful—conduct "which is becoming or fitting to a queen." Nor is the fin- ancial compensation for her scrvdce inadequate. Her remuneration 15 as large as any other wage earner in proportion to the ply sicc l > labor U and mental training which are required of her. A merchant never considers the gross returns of his business, but the net. Ho says to himself: "These goods were sold for so much. Now I must find out my .expenses- so much for store rent, so much for night watchman, so much for ex- pressage, • so much for commercial travelers, so much for advertising, so much for taxes, so much for this and so much for that and the other thing." Then that merchant sub- traats the expenses from the gross receipts, and he says, '"1 make so much net." No advantage in buying goods in a foreign market if the tariff laws eat up all Hie profits or in raising potatoes and apples in the Dakdtas or Montana if the rail- road freight to bring the fruit to the market costs' more than the goods are worth. No financial ad- vantage in being a downtown clerk and receiving $8 or $10 a week if the expenses of room rent and car fare and' the lunch counter and board and laundry bill and extra clothes absorb all 'the salary, And so when you place the, net income of an average servant girl against that of an average clerk you rind her sal- ary is mostly gain, while his, at <tho end of the week, after his legitimate expenses have been met, is absolute- ly nothing or about nothing, ANOTHER ADVANTAGE. But there is still another advan- tageous aspect of the question which should not be overlooked. Eliezer, the servant., was the chief man in Abraham's household. In how many American households, think ,you, is the cools the principal functionary, .upon whose skill and proficiency the physical, and to a very large ex - tont also - the moral, condition of o family depends? There are, 1 i11 venture to affirm, hundreds "o)'. erre Dangerous, th ry thousands of homes ia our laf•ge cities, to say nothing of as many more in the towns and villages whore the defection or incapacity o the cook or housekeeper would mea confusion and misery. A good honest, intelligent cook is a censer rotor of health and happiness. Bril las Savarin onto said that he who invented a new sauce was a benefac- tor to mankind. So the oaok who brightens your table with a well or- dered dinner and whose culinary skill gives zest to appetite is a benefac- tor to the house. Thele are chefs, many of then,, who by reason of their skill command salaries reach- ing up into the thousands of dol- lars, They understand the chemis- try of the kitchen; they have made a study of dietetics, and their ex- perience is quite as valuable to their employers as that of the skilled physician. There is abundant scope for ambition in the kitchon. ADVANTAGE OF DOMESTIC SERVICE. r Another advantage offered b do- mestic service is . that its surround- ings are puma This statement is not always true in reference to wo- men who have to work for their' liv- ing outside of the four walls of a home. Without they aro often com- pelled, even against their' wills, td` inhale the vitiating atmosphere of sin. They aro often compelled to see sights tvheeh their eyes ought never to behold and to. hear sayings which ought never to be heard and to stand shoulder to shoulder with moral lepers, whose sins, if not con- tagious, by too much association may become fatally infectious. 'Here, for instance, is a young girl just ar- rived from the country. 'She decides to enter a factory and become a day wage earner. Christian home is the most vital in- stitutian for good in all America I believe it is the foundation stone not only of the altar of. Christ, but also of the temple of neighborly love and also of our national legislative hall. • If a omit is not anchored in a locality by a home, that implies lie Las, as a r0), no individual church' connection Re is not living under the shadow of the church spire where his father and where hie child- ren were born.. A man cannot learn to love an individual church and his church pew unless he has been worshiping in that church for months and years. If a man has f no house and can move every few mem months by simply packing up his trunk and calling an expressman this implies 'that he has no neighbors; " this implies that bis joys and sor- rows are not his. The home is the foundrttion stone of the teinpi0 of patriotism. It has been well said by a great writer, "The surest • way to destroy anarchy is to bring about a social condition where every man can own a Boase," When a man sits upon his awn door- step he truly feels he is an Amncrlcan citizen. He will then, if necessary, be more willing to .die for that coun- try of which his home is a part. And one of the greatest curses blasting our large cities to -day is not that their people are bad, but that they are becoming a people without homes. They are lining for the, most part in boarding hpusos and in rented rooms, from which they can move out at a couple ,of weeks' notice. WHERE WOMAN IS QUEEN, The royal domestic is a queen. The kitchen and the nursery are the places where God expects n woman naturally to servo. I have no use for those masculine cynics who would debar women from the different vo- cations of life. Some men, no mat- ter what the genius of a woman may bo, would slam the door of all use- ful mow.ns of earning an hunest live- lihood in their sisters' faces. They say "a woman should not be a law- yer, a doctor, a minister, a mer- chant, an artist, a writer or any- thing else but a wife and a mother." But -this is what 1 do afirm : All things being equal, a woman ought to seek those vocations which are naturally hers and let the men i.fill those positions which naturally be- long. to them„ It is not natural for a woman to be soldier, a fire- man, a policeman. It is not nat- ural for her to dig in the gutter or work as a day laborer in the fields, as she is compelled to do in foreign lands. It is not natural for her to slave in a factory or to fill many of the clerical positions she is tilling to -day. While, on the other hand, it is natural for her to be a nurse, a dressmaker, a cook, a eboniber- maid, a waitress, a school taaeher anis lady's companion, and hundreds of other positions we might easily mention. , Now, when a woman deserts the positions for which God has special- ly equipped her, what is the inevit- able result ? Her work is not only left undone, but she becomes a •eom- petitor against her father and broth- ers for theirs. What is again the inevitable result ? By the late of supply and demand she not only underbids her brother ror his posi- tion, but by that bidding the whole system of wages goes clown. She is the sufferer. He is the sufferer. The mischief is far reaching. it is the result of hoe turning aside from her natural employment in which there is pressing need of her service and in which she could find constant occupation at remune,,ratii a wages, She leaves a place unfilled and forces her way into a wrilk of life already overcrowds(: and in which her com- petition is injurious to other work- ers. THE CHRISTIAN DOMESTIC. Now, women of America whom God has calledto be consecrated domestics, 1 plead with you to enter the kitchen and the nursery and- the home because that is ono of your natural spheres—that is a place where God wants you to work. The Christian domestic should be honor- ed both on earth and in heaven be- cause she is not only able to do her own work, but also to impress her consecrated life indelibly upon others. Thus, in closing, I would speak an earnest word to those women wlio are about to consecrate their lives to this line of service. God 'has r opened for you mighty possibilities for good. lit yourself for that work as the Lord Jesus Christ would have you, Make the Bible the chief textbook of your life. Pray, and unceasingly pray, that the Holy Spirit will inspire you to speak the right word in the right way. Above all, whatsoever your station in life may be, let inc urge you to enter the service, of Jesus Christ. Not even the subject of your life's occu- pation can compare in importance with the crucial question whether you are a servant of our Lord. Make that your first, your chief business, that you aro accepted of him and that you are obeying his commands. Look not for your rewards from n but so live that in the great day of judgment you may hear the best of all encomiums : "Well done ! Thou art one of my queens ! Thou hast been chief of all women ! 'Thou hast been a faithful servant." a-- BEFa-- BEFOREMARCON'I. An Egyptologist and an Assyrio- logist were disputing about the re- lative advancement of the two anci- ent peoples. whom they were study- ing. 'Why, sir," Grief the. Egyptologist, "we find remains of wires in Egypt which prove they understood electri- city!" "Pshawt" answered the Assyriolo- gist. "We don't find any wires in Assyria, and that shows they knew wiroloss telegraphy." p c WONDERFUL SU.RG11 RY. A man was stabbed through g the heart in a pu'blia-house row in Spi- talfields, and when taken to the Landon Hospital was in a bad way. The night surgeon on duty promptly operated, the puncture in the heart Was sewed up; and the patient from that Moment began to improve. Now there is every chance ci! ,c emendate ecov'ei'y That factory has scores of girls whom she would never dare introduce to her old Christian mother. That young girl within four weeks' service in that factory has seen and heard more wickedness than she has ever known before. Then this young girl goes from her factory to her boarding house. Upon her small salary she cannot afford to pay a very big board bill. The result is that she lives in a boarding house near her daily . work. ').'hat boarding house in all probability has young girls in it whose lives are not what they o'uoht to be. Seeing sin by day and necessarily seeing and hearing about sin by night has a ;hardening influ- ence upon the young girl's soul, Of course, the Divine Protector can and will preserve that yo•,tng country girl true and pure and noble if she keeps clinging to the omnipotent arum, but without that superhuman aid the moral tendency for the fe- male worker in the factory is dc Vn- ward. The life there is in some re- spects the same as that upon the theatrical stage, about which a not- ed actor once wrote; "The saddest fact about my profession is that the constant seting of what one ought not to see has a tendency to blunt the moral sensitiveness and blind one's eyes to his moral duty and to right." TEMPTATION AVOIDED. Then consider the besetting temp- tations ready to greet the young girl who applies for a position as clerk in a large downtown store. Parents, it is high time that you fully realize there aro among the owners of large downtown dry goods stores some who do not expect their clerks to live upon' their salaries. There are hundreds and thousands of those young girls whose costly dress proves 'that they arc not living upon their weekly wages. Everywhere- in those `downtown stores sin, stands around with outstretched arms cry- ing "Come! Come and wear fine clothes! Come and be respected as you cannot be in the kitchen or tate Y Come nursery! C m have and . e your nights to yourself! Come and see the brightest part of city life through the undimmed eyes of youth." And the young girls from the country, by the hundreds and thousands, aro turning their backs upon the relined employment of a domestic life and flinging themselves into the whirling. brain destroying, heart crushing maelstrom of temptation, where so many have been destroyed forever. The royal domestic should he among the most honored of all women. It largely depends on her readiness to perform her duties and hex' efficiency in her service whether or no this country is to be a nation of homes, "God setteth' the soli- tary in families," or as you could read it in ,the Bibio margin, "God sotteth the solitary in a house:" What does that mean 7. Simply this ; 1)very ideal unit of society should bo a home. What is an ideal home ? A father encl. a mother for the heads of the table, children for the nursery, servants to help provide for the domestic wants. 'While the husband is off to business the wile must be doing her work in the house But there is a limit to a wife's phy- sical and mental capacities. No av- erage mother can perform her domes - tie work without help. Skie can- not be nurse and dressmaker and cook and chambermaid and Waitress and marketer all in. one. She must have female assistance, She must have a servant or servants to aid her, or else she must give tip house- keeping. A VITAL'INSTITUTION. "But," says some one to me, "is the responsibility of the American girl Who Will not become a domestic servant so great ? Cannot men and women Who live in boardinlg houses and hotels'be just as good as those husbands and wives who have their ra've'n homes? ' No, my beother, I do not tlxink so, I believe the' r r1113 S. -45. LESSON. TItTT.E11NAT101'AL T,ESSO1',. ATM. 16. Text of the Lesson,. 1. Sam, xviia•., 6.16, Golden Text, Ps.' • xlvi,y 1 • Of chapter om' v'k c alt went to and his father's sheet great triumph ttim ag the hosts of 1 will not let Ix LO his father's t promotes lti this accepted us think of ;Mom written -that he king, accepted lus brethren, seeking his people and speak- ing seed (Est, promoted by Maul at,�or when we consid- er Uoen anoint- ed take Saul.'s women answered they lolayed and lmiti thousands thousands, * * d from that clay of the song i David wore greeted •n from. the Philistines and. which of jealousy David, so that he have 'more Saiti had remembered words of tirta.0 28, he would the kingdom as if he was al fit. 10. 1.1. Ansi it came to pass on the morrow that the evil spirit from. God came upon Saul, and he prophe- sied in the midst of the house, and David played with his hand as at other times. As David played on his harp at other times the evil spirit departed from Saul (xvi., 23), but now Saul was too much under the control of the evil spirit and did not seem to desire its departure, for there. was murder in his heart, and he attemp- ted to kill David. As to the evil spirit from God'so often mentioned (xvi., 14, 23; xix., 9) and similar seemingly difficult statements, the simple truth. was that Saul, having refused to obey God and follow Him, is left by God to the guidance of the one he preferred. 12-14. And Saul was afraid •of David, because the Lora was with him and was departed from Saul. * * * And David behaved hinmsoll wisely in all his ways, and the Lord was with him. Although Saul humbled him to be the captain only of a thousand (verse 18), David kept evenly on his way and Walked wisely in the sight of the Lord, conscious of His pres- ence and approval. The phrase "be- have wisely" is the same as "pros- per" or "have good succuss" (Josh. 1., 7, 8; Jer. xxiii., 5), and in Ps. xxxii., 8, it is "instruct." By the Spirit of the Lord mightily upon him (xvi., 13, It. V.) Ile was so in- structed that he could say, 'I will behave .myself wisely in a perfect way" (Ps. ci., 2), and by the grace of God he diel. 'If wo allow our- selves to be affected by or comp un- der the •power of people or circum- stances, we do not prosper or behave wisely, but to have a heart only for God—that is true prosperity. By the grace of God David so lived that his name was much set by, or preci- ous (verse 30 and margin), in the eyes of the people. The words. "The Lord was with hint" (verse 12, 14 and, 28), remind us. of Joseph and his trial's and that both as slave and prisoner the Lord Was with him and he was a prosperous man (Gen: xxxix., 2, 3, 21, 23), 15. Wherefore when Saul saw that he behaved himself very wisely he was afraid of him. Sin and a guilty conscience make cowards. Adam, having sinned, was afraid and sought. h h' o to d� r t~ hide f oinGod. . g Abraham was afraid that they would kill hint for his wife's sake, and he and she consented to lie, and; so also did Isaac and Rebekah (Gen.' iii. 10; xii, 12; xx, 11.; xxvi. 7) The testimony of an upright life is - there is a cons:inx:ce that a.imo up - f braids. God knows and the guilty person knows; they know together (conscience) even if no one else knows. 16. But all Israel and Judah lov- ed David, b©cause he went opt and came in before them. Long afterward, when he was an- ointed king at Hebron, they spake to him in these words : `When Saul f was king over us, thou east- he that Ieddest out and broughtest in Is- rael" (Il Sam. v. 2).. "Going out and coming in" in a phrase that seems to cover all one's daily lire. When Stolomon became king, he said to God : "1 a.m. but a little - child. 1 know not how to go out or coxae in" (I. Kings iii, 7). So the beau- tiful promise in Ps. cxxi. 8, "The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy conning in from this time foz;th and even forcve_t more," with the assurance in Dent. xxviii, 6, "Blessed shalt thou he when thou guest out" includes the whole life, When thus blessed and kept by God, We need not fear the hatred or ill will of any • one, but may find all iiecessal•y, comfort in such words as these : "I, even I, ant he that comn- forthoth you. 'Who art thou that thou shouldst be afraid of a man- * * * -and forgettoth the Lord, thy Maker ?" (Isa, Ii, 12,18), And re- joice to say ; "The Lord is my light and my salvation; whole shall 1 fear? ,The Lord is the strength of my life; .of whom shall I be afraid?" "Ilehold, God is rxzy• salvation; 1 will trust and. not be afraid," f "'What time T am afraid I will trust •in thee" (Ph, xXii, 1; I"i, f3, 4, 11; Isa. nil, 2), The R. V. o 15, IS that David w from Sau) to feed 1 a, but note after 'histel his virtually leading Israel to victory Sauhim re- turn any more house (verse 2), but xn, as stated in esson., ...'hat David wasby the people makes decal, of whom 11 is was next • to the of the multitude of eking the wealth ofpeak- ing peace to all x., 3), Ilfs being proseems a very small ui that he had noint- ed by Samuel place in duo time. 6-9. And the ono another assaid, Saul hath slainand David his ten* and Saul eyed Davifor- ward, This was partwith Which Saul and ou their return victory over the stir- red in Saul a spiritand hatred of Dati said, "What can he but the kingdom?" If and believed theel in chapter xv„have known that was as surely David'sready in possossiou o SEA AIR FOR MMUS AFF I S.,. Wizen sea aim is ordered to .a nervous person, she usuail ` rushes down to the seashore, spends all her time on the beach, frets more or less over the expense, and returns after two or three weeks to snake up by extra work for the brief holiday. The result is ,an ex- aggeration of nervous troubles. The time given to the cure was too short. ese. e �1 Fq Gild STRENGTH TO 1') v . -• srolin(it,wsAi;.fitAgio." or EY cuTioNPAO1.wR5TRNi is % ENRicri C vNNS UT ON' n. fi uv ��uroe �ii4tW�= ell Druggists & ChemA Price in Canada : $1.00 ; Six bottles for $5.00 tc'JT. JArn s Yv AI'.BRS are as good, for the nerves as the sea breeze ; but, in case of nervous weakness, like the sea breeze, they require bine, ST,ANI , S WAzr • it J � zr s are a tissue. builder and a reconstructive, not a stimulant. Quick temporary results are not to be expected ; but perma- nent improvement will follow thein' patient use, ,Yxt ,ST.ANi J � WAI�>t�S help stomach, digest food and send the nutriment through the blood, and this is the honest way to get health and strength, the bind that lasts, develops and breeds the energy which accom- plishes much. "I#rom personal experience am able to appreciate the great ,value or' the St. Jatttes\Vafers,n► Dr. Charles D, Camp, ' Dublin, Ireland St: Janus !Wafers are not a secret remedy: to the nuorsrousdoclorsre- commending then: to their patients we mail the formula upon request. Where dealers are not selling the Wafers, they are mailed upon re- ceipt of pace at the Canadian branch; St. James Wafers Co., 1728 5t. Catherine 5t., Montreal, o FORTHE HOME .94 ® o 0 0 0 Recipes for the Kitchen. t'D Hygiene and Other Notes for the Housekeeper. ®tpm o0e0ocp®(1Dser0oera • DOMESTIC RECIPES. Cream Cake.—Two cups sugar, one cup each of butter anis sweet milk, three cups of flour before sifting; the whites of seven eggs, well beaten, two teaspoomifuls of baking powder, the on me quantity of vanilla. Bak -e in layers. For the cream take two cups of sugar, ten tablespoonfuls of thick cream, half a teaspoonful of vanilla. Cook till thick and •put between the layers. White • Salad Dressing.—Put a rounding spoonful of butter and half a cup of sweet cream into a sauce- pan; heat to boiling; then acki, gra- axially, a rounding teaspoonful of cornstarch, moistened with a fourth of a cup of cold sweet milk and cook for fie minutes, or until it is well thickened. Add a level teaspoonful each of sugar and salt, a fourth of a teaspoonful of black pepptr, and a dash of cayenne, a rounding table- spoonful of prepared murtaiid and one-fourth of a cup of lemon juice. Mix very thoroughly. Beat in the beaten whites of two eggs, and 'when cold stir in lightly half a cup of whipped cream. Maple Sugar Cake.—Cream ono cup of butter with one cup of shaved maple sugar and two cups of granu- lated':sugar, three eggs beaten separ- ately, one cup of sweet milk, three cups of flour and *three teaspoonfuls of baking poteder. Bake in three layers. Filling :—Cook one pound of maple sugar with onelialf cup of water until it threads. Stir until nearly cool, then add the beaten white of one egg and three table- spoonfuls of XXX sugar. Spread between the layers, sprinkling broken walnut meats over each layer. To the remainder- of the frosting add one tablespoonful of the XXX sugar spread it smoothly over the top and sides. Garnish with whole walnut meats. Love Wells—Make an ordinary tvliite calve the day before using. The day of serving cut small cakes from the large one. Remove the centers with a very small cake cutter, .being careful not to break the bottoms, thus leaving little wells. When this is done snake a cream to fill them. Cover the tops with any kind of frosting to hide the wells. Filling: Heat 1 pt. thick cream. When ready to boil stir into it • quickly 1 heap- ing tablespoon - cornstarch, blended with cold- cream, sweeten to taste and allow it to boil gently, stirring it for two or three minutes. Aldi quickly the beaten whites of three eggs. Do not allow it to boil up mom than once after the eggs are added. flavor to taste. Mock Cream Pio.—Roll out the up- per and under crest with a little four between. Baho a delicate brown. Split there as soon as baked, and set them away until, wanted for the table. '.Chen fill them between with a custard made of 1 pt. boiling hot milk thickened with 2 egg% 2-3 cup white sugar, 2 tablespoons floor. salt and season Scald together until thickened. When almost cold, fill the pie and eat when entirely cooled, , 'Almond Souffle—Set '1 -half glass of jelly on the *teakettle lid to soften. F3`ave blanched and pounded tee a paste before they were shelled 1-3 lb. almonds. Bat the whites of 4 eggs separately to a stiff froth, add to each egg 1 heaping tablespoon powdered sugar, mix the 4 eggs to- gether, then beat in the jelly, lastly the- nuts. This can be used without r mints asa dressing for e o g a pudding. This souffle Nerved with whipped cream, makes a rich and delicate dressing. Fruit and Custard Fillixtg.- Crehan together one auci one-half cupfuls granulated sugar and one-third cup- ztl butter; add to this ttvo table- s'poonfttls corn -starch wetted with enough cold water to dissolve it stir all together in aa earthen els, and pour on enough boiling water to make a thick custard beat the whites of two eggs to a cl'ry froth, add them to , the custard, stir well, then set in a pot of boiling water for fifteen minutes.Allow the cus- tard to become cool, mix with the, custard one scant cupful of finely- minced banana,, or the banana xnay be pressed through a sieve or colan- der, then added to the custard,Sprea cl between the crusts, then cover with; meringue made of the beaten whites of two eggs and one- half cupful pulverized pink sugar: Peaches; pineapples, Bartlett pears strawberries and apricots may be substituted for the bananas in the above recipe with equally good re- sults; the fruit may be sliced thinly and laid upon each crust, and sugar. sprinkled upon them, and •the custard spread over the fruit. This custard also forms the basis of a delicious chocolate pie. The custard minus the fruit, is spread upon the crusts; then beat the whites of two eggs to froth, add sugar and grated chocolate and vanilla to them and spread over top of pie. FOR THE EYES, Don't read in a reclining attitude, or in bed. Don't sit facing a strong light. If possible, let the light fall on the work or book from over the lett shoulder. Don't neglect to bathe the eyes oc- casionally in salt water. A weak solution is best. Don't bathe eyes that are inflamed with cold water. Use warm water. Don't open the eyes under water when bathing, especially in salt water. Don't fail to wash the eyes every night before retiring, so as to re- move any dust. that may have gath- ered on the lids during the day. Don't have colored shades, on the lamps. Use white or ground glass. 1f you must have a colored shade, let it be green. Don't wear a veil with black dots or one woven with double threads. Don't try 'to get a cinder out of the eye by rubbing. Dip a tiny camel's brush in oil and draw gently, across the eyeball. NOVEL PINCUSHION. Buy a new handled tea strainer. Make a pad of muslin to fit the bowl, and stuff with sawdust. Geyer this with pink :satin and place in the bowl. Take one yard of pink satin ribbon No. 5, and gather for. a. ruffle. Sew around the bowl. Wind the handle with satin, and sew a bow at top and base of handle, each made of half yd. of the ribbon. Are just .what every weak, nervous, run- ' down woman needs to snake her strong and well. They cure those feel- ings of smothering and sinking that come on at times, make the heart beat strong and regular, give Sweet, refresh- ing sleep and banish head- aches and ner- vousness. They infuse nein life and energy into dispirited,health- shattered women who have conte to think there is eo cure for thein, They cure Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Nervous Prostration, Brain Fag, 1aiirt and Dizzy • Spells, Listlessness, After Effects of La Grippe and Fever, Antenna, General Debility and all troables arising from a run-down system. Price 50o. per lox or 5 for $L29 all.dringeiste or mailed by '1► k11 T, 141/.165)k1t' Co. NII W Toronto, Onto HEART NERVE